Abstract

Region similarity learning plays an essential role in applications such as business site selection, region recommendation, and urban planning. Earlier studies mainly represent regions as bags of points of interest (POIs) for region similarity comparisons, which cannot fully exploit the spatial features of the regions. Recently, researchers propose to use deep neural networks to exploit spatial features such as POI geo-coordinates and categories, which have produced more accurate and robust region similarity learning results. However, many useful features such as the height and size of a POI, and the distance and relative importance between the POIs, are still overlooked in these methods. To take advantage of such features, we propose to represent regions as graphs, where nodes are POIs with rich features such as height, size, and hexagonal coordinates, while edges are the relationships between POIs formulated by their road network distances. To capture POIs' importance, we weigh them by their height and size. Since there is limited availability of ground-truth region similarity data, we propose a contrastive learning-based multi-relational graph neural network (C-MPGCN) for region similarity learning based on the graph representations. To generate data for model training, we propose a soft graph edit distance (SGED) based algorithm to generate triples of similar and dissimilar graphs of a given graph (representing a given region) based on the POI weights. Experimental results show that C-MPGCN outperforms the state-of-the-art methods for region similarity learning consistently with an improvement of at least 8.6% and 9.4% in terms of MRR and HR@1, respectively.

Full Text
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